| > I’m sorry to hear about your wife’s friend. But both examples you gave (people having to fight for further diagnoses of outside-case health problems) are really common with private healthcare in the United States too - we’ve just shifted the burden of cost of treatment/quality of life decisions to private entities who typically are only interested in furthering shareholder value. Having a profit motive is only a serious problem when there is insufficient competition. Otherwise companies that try to make outlandish profits would lose business to companies that offer better coverage for lower premiums by taking smaller profits. Insurance company profits are only a single digit percentage of US healthcare costs; eliminating them wouldn't make a real dent anyway. (In many cases the "profits" are also unavoidable. For example, if the insurance carrier owns its building then the internal rents are "profit" but if you want to replace them you would still need a building and then have to pay for it from somewhere else. Every dollar you spend on anything is profit to somebody.) And a profit motive will in general tend to lower costs, because a company that can eliminate waste and then charge lower premiums for the same coverage will get more business and make more money. There are a lot of reasons it doesn't work out that way for US health insurance, e.g. when it's provided with employer subsidies under tax incentives it reduces competitive pressure (employees can't choose another insurer) and the tax incentives reduce price sensitivity. But a big one is this: > I would like to understand if the world really does rely on US private-healthcare funded research - I’ve heard this argument mentioned before and have always been curious about it. The basis premise behind the patent system is like this. It takes a lot of money to do R&D and it may not even turn into anything, but once it's public knowledge, everybody starts making the thing and not just the party who paid for the R&D. Which makes it a lot more profitable to wait for somebody else to do R&D and then go into competition with them than to do the R&D yourself, so then nobody has the incentive to do it. Patents say if you do the work you get a temporary monopoly on selling the thing to give you some time to recover your R&D before competition drives down the price. In principle this allows the market to set the price. If you invent a more efficient light bulb, you can ask $1000 for one but no one will pay that much even if you have a monopoly, they'll just buy the old light bulbs. But you might be able to charge as much of a premium as your light bulb will save in electricity over the existing ones and still find buyers. With drugs the incremental value is often very high -- it could save your life when the alternative is that you die. Which is what you want to happen, because you want a large financial incentive to do R&D that can save lives. But then the cost can be really high which makes people want some kind of insurance. When you have private insurers in competition with one another, you still basically have a market. If the drug maker demands a trillion dollars to treat one patient, any insurance company willing to pay that would have to charge premiums nobody can afford, and then nobody would buy that insurance and the drug maker would get no sales. So there is a limit on what they can charge, but it's still pretty high, because people really want their insurance to cover those drugs and will strongly prefer insurance carriers that do over those that don't. And then you get the large financial incentive to do life-saving R&D as desired. With a single payer system, that competition between insurers doesn't exist. If the system refuses to pay the maker's price for a drug, the system can't lose customers to a competing insurer that will. Which means you have a monopsony buyer that can dictate prices. Naturally they have the incentive to dictate prices that are lower. But higher prices during the exclusivity period is how the patent system directs money to R&D. By dictating lower prices they're not paying their share of the cost of developing the drugs that only exist because the US is paying more, and causing some life-saving drugs to not exist because the US market on its own isn't enough to justify the R&D. |
This works in an idealized free market.
Health care is, for a variety of reasons, fundamentally incompatible with this, even if the powerful and wealthy interests within it are not actively working to destroy some of the basic premises of a free market (like equal information).